Sunday, May 22, 2022

Jennifer Freed Publishes Debut Poetry Collection



From today's Boston Globe:

 

Debut poetry collection

In her moving and powerful debut collection, “When Light Shifts: A Memoir in Poems” (Kelsay), Jennifer L. Freed writes of her mother’s cerebral hemorrhage and its aftermath. She captures the surreality of the world continuing to spin in the midst of crisis. Her mother has a stroke on the driveway, as “The chipmunks raced on round the junipers. / The sun went on bleaching the clapboards.” A matter-of-factness speaks to the gravity of the moment: sometimes facts are all we can express. Freed’s poems are precise, but never unfeeling, and she is alert to the moments when words won’t take us where we need to go. These poems operate in the deepest wells of experience: fear and frustration and love and pain. “If I can name what I miss, / will I know where to look — / how to find it in her?”

Here website is here:  https://jfreed.weebly.com/

Here is Jennifer's bio:


Jennifer L. Freed is the author of When Light Shifts (Kelsay, 2022), based on the aftermath of her mother's stroke, and of a chapbook, These Hands Still Holding, a finalist in the 2013 New Women's Voices Competition (Finishing Line Press, 2014).  She was awarded the 2020 Samuel Washington Allen Prize for a long poem or poem-sequence (New England Poetry Club), has been a finalist for the Frank O'Hara prize multiple times, and has received multiple nominations for the Pushcart Prize and Orison Anthology.  She writes and teaches in Massachusetts.

Less recently, Jennifer Freed's non-fiction describing her experiences as an English language teacher in Sichuan, China, was published in The Yale-China Review, and, in Chinese translation, in Cultural Meetings: American Writers, Scholars, and Artists in China (Guangxi Normal University Press).  

Her articles about life in Prague in the 1990s, shortly after the fall of the communist government, appeared in the travel section of The Boston Globe.  

Saturday, May 21, 2022

Cameron Sanders

 In preparing for our Reunion, Yale has compiled a list of classmates who have passed away.  In reviewing the list, I learned that Cameron Sanders died just a few weeks ago.  Here is what his LA Times obituary had to say:





June 23, 1965 - May 6, 2022 Cam Sanders, 56, passed away peacefully on Friday, May 6, at his home in Los Angeles. Born in Cincinnati, he spent early peripatetic years as a Foreign Service child at his family's postings in the Middle East, Europe and Washington, DC.

He graduated from St. Paul's School, Yale, and Santa Monica College, and he was a long-time member of All Saints Church-Pasadena and a dedicated baritone in its Canterbury Choir. A remarkable photographer, he could capture your best self on film. He also was a passionate actor, tap dancer, Masters swimmer, pianist, writer, cutthroat Scrabble player, champion crossword puzzler, and dog adopter. Multifaceted as he was, he may be best remembered as a true friend and a very dear guy. He leaves behind beloved communities in all aspects of his life.

Cam was predeceased by his mother, Betsy Sanders, of Washington, DC. He is survived by his father, Cameron H. Sanders, Jr.; siblings Helen Gray, Marcia Loughran, and Nick Sanders; extended family David Loughran, Erika Erzberger, Julian Gray, and Kim Bender; nieces and nephews Jamie, Katherine, Emily, Jojo, Ben, Lillian, and Simon; his cherished Staffordshire terrier Grace, and more loving aunts, uncles, cousins, and friends than we have words to express.

Now we remaining must sing, dance, swim, surf, photograph, reflect, read, meditate, play piano, garden, bring home flowers, adopt a pet, drink good coffee, cook and eat together, be a great godparent and uncle/aunt, and read Tennessee Williams while acting out all the parts.

In lieu of flowers, please consider making a donation to: All Saints Church Pasadena, the United Farm Workers Union, or Amnesty International.

Walking Tour at Reunion

Yale has changed a lot since 1987. The 35th Reunion Campus Walking Tour will refamiliarize you with your favorite haunts and introduce you to new buildings and sites on campus. Led by Yale graduate and New Haven resident Shana Schneider of FitstyleByShana, the hour-long walk will be brisk, but, as Schneider said, "No walker will be left behind!"

The walk is limited to 25 (there will be a waitlist). So tell your friends and sign up now:
– 9-10 a.m. on Saturday, June 4. Meet at the Rose Alumni House, 232 York St., near the Pierson College entrance.

Catherine Marquet Elliott -- new podcast episode



 Catherine Marquet Elliott has spent her adult life teaching French in a public school in Massachusetts.  Listen as she describes her journey form a young teacher who set out to teach French to a master teacher who realizes the classroom experience is about changing lives and helping young people transform.  Catherine thinks about the classroom and her students in a wholistic and inspirational way.   While this is a valuable conversation for everyone, it is particularly important for young people who might be thinking about becoming a teacher.  Catherine makes a powerful case for transforming the lives of students one class at a time. Here is how Catherine describes herself:  "I am a career classroom teacher in a public middle school. I have been teaching French in rural Massachusetts since 1989. Becoming a public school teacher is the best decision I have made in my life. It's been an incredible ride. If you know a young person who is interested in becoming a teacher, I hope that you will encourage them with enthusiasm."


Sunday, May 15, 2022

Rob Raguso -- new podcast episode

 

Rob Raguso is the closest thing Yale has to Indiana Jones.  He travels to remote jungles to study bugs.  He understands both art and natural history.  He is an integrative thinker who is just a joy to speak with.  Please spend 30 minutes eavesdropping on our conversation.  You will be glad you did.


Here is how Rob describes his work: "I study plant-insect interactions from molecules to ecosystems. I am an integrative and comparative biologist with an interest in the chemical senses. Everything begins with natural history."



Thursday, May 5, 2022

Charlotte Sussman -- new podcast episode


I spent some time with Charlotte Sussman recently talking about our shared passions of sailing and literature.  Charlotte is a Professor of English at Duke and recently the author of Peopling the World.  One website explains: Through a literary lens, Professor Charlotte Sussman examines the 18th-century shift in Britain’s understanding of the value of human reproduction, the vacancy of the planet and the necessity of moving people around to fill its empty spaces. In Milton’s 1667 “Paradise Lost,” Adam and Eve are promised they will produce a “race to fill the world,” a thought that consoles them after the fall. By 1798, the idea that the world would one day be entirely filled by people had become a nightmarish vision in Malthus’s “Essay on the Principle of Population.” Sussman places these and other texts in the context of debates about scientific innovation, emigration, cultural memory and colonial settlement.




Monday, May 2, 2022

Some thoughts on Reunion

As we get ready for our Reunion, it is a good time to reflect. As I think about it, I am very proud to be your classmate. Have I supported every decision and every statement a classmate has ever made? Of course not. Have some actions of our classmates been difficult to watch, or even worthy of condemnation? Yes. But, the sum of our experience is not to be taken from a single incident, a single statement, or a single person. Our measure as a class is and should remain the contributions we all have made, and will continue to make, for the betterment of our classmates' lives, the Yale community and the communities in which we live. When I take that measure, I see people who stand for what they believe, who live remarkable lives, and who make their world, and ours, better. Some do it in private ways – by raising amazing children, building businesses, healing the sick, advancing human knowledge and understanding and a myriad other ways you will never read about in the paper or hear about on a news show. Some live their lives more publicly, sharing their views through art, literature, film, legal activism, public service and politics. And, some have inspired others by battling difficult odds with grace and dignity. As a whole, our class is an engaged group of people from which I continually draw inspiration. So, I would ask that as you consider our class and its legacy, that you take a broad view and consider the breadth of what our classmates have accomplished and the lives they have lived.

I would also ask that as you come to Reunion you do so remembering that we cannot know the experiences our classmates have had since that Labor Day weekend in 1983 when we first met. So, please respect where people are coming from and where they've been. Take the time to listen -- to truly listen -- to each other. You need not agree with, or even like, everyone in our class. But, I would ask that you take the time to respectfully consider their point of view.

I would also ask that you take the time to enjoy the full weekend that has been planned. Some of it is serious, some of it is silly, most of it is social. Find your people. Find some new people. And, try to enjoy being together.

For each of us, Yale was a gift, the worth of which it has taken 35 years to fully appreciate. The Reunion is about being thankful for that gift, enjoying each other's company once again, and maybe, just maybe, finding a way to enrich our lives and the lives of those we love just a little bit more.



Thursday, April 21, 2022

Who Cares What Happens to Bootprints on the Moon? | Michelle Hanlon | TEDxUniversityofMississippi

 Classmate Michelle Hanlon is a space lawyer, that is she specializes in the law of outer space.  

Listen to her recent, super-interesting Ted Talk:


Michael Barr nominated to be Vice Chair in Charge of Supervision of the Federal Reserve

 Classmate Michael Barr has been very busy -- most recently as a Professor at the University of Michigan.  He was just appointed to be Vice Chair of Supervision of the Federal Reserve, a huge job.



Congratulations!


Here is President Biden's announcement, after the break

Kevin Berlin -- new podcast episode



Kevin Berlin is a unique fixture in our class.  In this episode, he tells us about his signature top hat, his work as an artist and his creative response to COVID.

Listen to his podcast here:


Kevin Berlin is an international artist best known for painting, sculpture, and performance. Berlin currently lives in Southampton, New York and Florence, Italy. Berlin, a Yale University Alumnus, studied at the Slade School of Fine Art and has appeared in The New York Times Magazine, Shanghai Daily, The Miami Herald, USA Today, MTV, Tokyo Television, BBC Radio and over 40 television stations. Berlin's works are found in collections including Kim Basinger, Luciano Pavarotti, Bill and Hillary Clinton, President George W. Bush, Quincy Jones, Buzz Aldrin, Barton G., HRH Princesse Antonella de Orleans-Bourbon, and Pieter & Marieke Sanders.
For more about Kevin, visit: https://www.kevinberlin.com/
Also, please enjoy one of Kevin's recent videos:  https://youtu.be/BwhKV80vP4s

Here is some examples of Kevin's work:












Tuesday, April 19, 2022

Carrie Baker-- new podcast episode

 


Carrie's conversation was not what I had expected.  I had read her work and seen her photography, but I was not prepared for the very personal perspective Carrie shared in how she has traveled her path.  Listen.  You will hear about the Yale of the late 1980s, about sexism and misogyny, and about a resilient classmate who has taken on the ideas and people who have stood in her way.  I was inspired.

Carrie has her own website that highlights here work:  https://www.carriebakerphd.com/.  If you visit, don't skip the photography -- her images are very moving.

To listen to the podcase, click here:


Here's a bit about Carrie:
Carrie N. Baker lives, works and writes from Western Massachusetts.
Dr. Baker is the Sylvia Dlugasch Bauman Chair of American Studies and a Professor in the Program for the Study of Women and Gender at Smith College and is a contributing editor at Ms. magazine.. She is an expert on women's rights law and policy, specializing in sexual harassment, sex trafficking, and reproductive rights and justice.
Dr. Baker has a BA (’87) in philosophy from Yale University, a JD (’94) from Emory University School of Law, and an MA (’94) and a Ph.D. (’01) from Emory University’s Department of Women's, Gender, and Sexuality Studies.
At Smith College, Dr. Baker has been chair of the Program for the Study of Women and Gender and was a co-founder and former co-director of the Five College Certificate in Reproductive Health, Rights and Justice. Baker is affiliated with the American Studies Program, the archives concentration, and the public policy minor.
She has published three books: The Women's Movement Against Sexual Harassment (Cambridge University Press, 2007), Fighting the US Youth Sex Trade: Gender, Race and Politics (Cambridge University Press, 2018), and co-authored Sexual Harassment Law: History, Cases, and Practice (Carolina Academic Press). Her first book was the winner of the National Women's Studies Association 2008 Sara A. Whaley book prize.
In addition, she writes regularly for Ms. magazine and has a monthly column in the Daily Hampshire Gazette (Northampton, MA). Baker is part of the Scholars Strategy Network, Women’s Media Center SheSource, and is the co-chair of the Ms. Committee of Scholars, which trains scholars to write for the popular media. 

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Wednesday, April 13, 2022

Sunday, April 10, 2022

MIT reinstates its SAT/ACT requirement



A lot has been written about standardized testing, with some hoping that the SAT/ACT will no longer be required for colleges.  Elite colleges made these tests optional during COVID.  The question is: will that last?  This is an academic question for some, but for those with children who will be applying to college soon, this is a very concrete issue.  

In the current environment, to submit or not submit test scores is a matter of strategy.  Accordingly to the College Board, only 43% of applicants submitted scores in the applications submitted for the first year college students who entered college in 2021.  More importantly, those submitting scores were not random.  As summarized in this Inside Higher Ed article, it looks like:

  • Reporting was "far higher … among applicants living in more affluent communities, as defined by local median household income in applicants’ local ZIP codes."
  • Reporting rates "were highest in several Southern and Midwestern states and lowest in several Northeastern and Western states."
  • Underrepresented minority students and first-generation students were less likely to report than were other students.
  • While test scores declined for all groups, "more selective member institutions, both public and private, more often received test scores with applications than did less selective colleges."
  • "Individual applicants sometimes employed different test score reporting strategies across their various applications," the report said. "Specifically, nearly one in four (24 percent) of applicants reported scores in some, but not all, of their applications (up from 4 percent last season)
  • Given this state of play, it is notable that MIT has announced that it will again require SAT/ACT scores of applicants.  I encourage you to read their entire post to understand their explanation, by clicking here.  

    MIT has concluded that, after reviewing data that has not been publicly released, it can better ensure that its admitted students can handle the rigors of their demanding curriculum if they can look at test scores among other criteria.  

    Here is a summary of what they had to say:

    To briefly summarize a great deal of careful research:  

    • our ability to accurately predict student academic success at MIT02 
      is 
      significantly improved by considering standardized testing — especially in mathematics — alongside other factors 
    • some standardized exams besides the SAT/ACT can help us evaluate readiness, but access to these other exams is generally more socioeconomically restricted03 relative to the SAT/ACT
    • as a result, not having SATs/ACT scores to consider tends to raise socioeconomic barriers to demonstrating readiness for our education,04 relative to having them, given these other inequalities
    What do you think?  Should Yale follow MIT?  What does this say for the test-optional era?  Anything?

    Thursday, April 7, 2022

    Margo Pave -- new podcast episode

    Margo Pave has been a force since college, committed to justice and building the world in which she wants to live. Part of her journey has included becoming a single mother later in life. Listen in as Margo talks about the joys of raising children and the world she wants to leave them. You will leave the episode inspired and maybe a little exhausted.

     

    Tom McNulty -- new podcast episode

     Classmate Tom McNulty had a winding path to the energy business, but has spent most of his life thinking about our nation's energy supply -- how it is used, where it comes from and what the future holds.  During the conversation, Tom kept talking about the climate change "debate," so I asked him what he meant by that.  I was surprised by his answer.  It was thought provoking and important.  Take a listen.  Bring an open mind.  And, think about how Tom's perspectives might inform our the class discussion about climate change and solutions to it.





    Monday, April 4, 2022

    Laura Ekstrand -- new podcast episode


    Listen to Laura Ekstrand's take on things and you'll hear from a classmate who has built a creative community.  She was co-founder of Dreamcatcher Reparatory Theater (now, Vivid Stage) with Janet Sales in 1994. She has her own podcast, Local with Laura Ekstrand, and an impressive body of work, which you can read about on her website: https://www.lauraekstrand.com/

    She has appeared at Dreamcatcher in Be Here Now, The Lucky Ones, What Stays; Sister Play; Rapture, Blister Burn; Motherhood Out Loud, and Shakespeare in Vegas, among many others, and is a member of The Flip Side improv comedy troupe. New Jersey Theatre: Bickford Theatre, Passage Theater, 12 Miles West, The Theater Project, Luna Stage, and the Pushcart Players. New York Theatre: Naked Angels, Ensemble Studio Theatre, and New Georges. Film: Fat Ass Zombies; Split Ends, High Art and I Shot Andy Warhol. Television: Hack, Sex And The City, Law & Order, and The Guiding Light. As a director: Dead and Buried, Every Brilliant Thing, The How and the Why, Things Being What They Are, Next Fall, Distracted, The Pursuit Of Happiness, Melancholy Play, Pride’s Crossing, Full Bloom and many others. Podcast directing: The Weirdness and Young Ben Franklin for Gen Z Media. As a playwright: What Stays (with Jason Szamreta), Whatever Will Be, The Neighborhood (Book and Lyrics; Music by Joe Zawila), Brink of Life (Book; Lyrics by Steve Harper; Music by Oliver Lake) and Astonishment, How to be Old: A Beginner’s Guide, and At Ninety-Three (Adaptations). Laura is a private monologue and public speaking coach and holds a BA from Yale University and an MFA from Sarah Lawrence College. Laura is a member of AEA, SAG-AFTRA and the Dramatists Guild.





    Friday, March 18, 2022

    Goodbye, Pizza, Taxes; Hello, Classrooms

    Goodbye, Pizza, Taxes; Hello, Classrooms: Yale plans to transform the former home of Wall Street Pizza — and before that, Naples Pizza — into classrooms and gathering spaces. …

    You have to read it to believe it.  

    "Yale plans to transform the former home of Wall Street Pizza — and before that, Naples Pizza — into classrooms and gathering spaces.

    The university shared that update at Tuesday evening’s Downtown-Wooster Square Community Management Team, soon after striking an agreement with the city that, if approved, would prolong the university’s property tax responsibilities for converted academic spaces.

    The planned renovations to 82 – 90 Wall St. entail demolishing the pizza kitchen and dining space to build three classrooms, two of which could be merged into one larger space. The university also plans to create an indoor lounge area and an outdoor back patio in the former pizza restaurant, which has been vacant since 2019.

    Yale plans no real major changes on the upper levels” of the building, said Yale facilities planner James Fullton, other than replacing windows and performing some maintenance work on the facade."


    Thursday, March 17, 2022

    Tamar Gendler -- new podcast episode

    Tamar Gendler is always so engaging and this conversation is no exception.  In this episode, Tamar talks about her work as a professor, as the Dean of the Faculty of Arts and Sciences at Yale, and as a parent to two amazing children, one of whom is transgender.  This conversation will make you think and feel fortunate that we have such a thoughtful and caring classmate.



    Thursday, March 10, 2022

    Doris Iarorvici -- new podcast episode



    Doris Iarovici has had such a rich and considered life.  Doris brought her experience as an immigrant to Yale, and has emerged as a thoughtful and compassionate artist and doctor.  Listen in as she shares her experiences and what it is like to have Minnie Driver play her in an adaptation of Doris' life story.

    Check out Doris' website: www.dorisiarovici.com.  There, you'll learn about her newest book, Minus One.  

    Here is Doris' bio:  Doris Iarovici grew up in New York City after arriving there at age 5 from Romania. She began writing shortly thereafter, and first published poetry and essays in Seventeen Magazine as a teenager. A graduate of Yale College and the Yale University School of Medicine, she has since divided her time between writing and medicine, and has published both fiction and non-fiction.

    Her newest book, Minus One, was released in November 2020 and can be ordered below, or through your favorite bookstore.

    She has been awarded writing fellowships from the Djerassi Resident Artists' Program in California, Virginia Center for the Creative Arts in Virginia, Hambidge Center in Georgia, and the North Carolina Arts Council.

    She works as a psychiatrist at Harvard University, and lives in Boston.



    Thursday, February 24, 2022

    Sidney Hardee -- new podcast episode


    Had a great conversation with classmate Sidney Hardee, who shared some great stories about his time at Yale.  His mother was a hug influence on Sidney, as were his fraternity brothers.  He also talks about how he has built his own business.  Listen in!

    So you know more about Sidney, he is the Managing Partner of Hardee Brothers, LLC and Global Investment Advisor for the Probabilities Fund, LLC. He has a broad base of experience in global investing, derivatives research, quantitative analysis, and portfolio management.

    Sidney is a former Trading Manager at the Bank of NT Butterfield in Bermuda where he led their fixed income and derivatives trading initiatives. He began his career as a Market Analyst at Salomon Brothers focused on European Bond Markets. Later he joined Lehman Brothers in both New York and London as a Bond Trader. He was also a Vice President in both Credit Markets Trading and Global Rates Strategy groups at JPMorgan.

    A Chartered Financial Analyst (CFA), Sidney is a member of the Alternative Investments committee and the Performance and Risk committee of the CFA Society of New York (CFANY). He is a former member of the United States Investment Performance Committee (USIPC) and current member of Global Promotions committee for the Global Investment Performance (GIPS). He is also a member of the Board of Advisory for the Master of Science Program in Financial Risk Management at the University of Connecticut School of Business. He holds a B.A in Economics and Mathematics from Yale University and holds a M.S in Applied Statistics from Columbia University.


    To listen, click here.

    Monday, February 21, 2022

    Yale’s Happiness Professor Says Anxiety Is Destroying Her Students

     A super interesting article in the New York Times from the professor who teaches the Yale Happiness Course.  I would recommend you take a read.  Here's how it begins:

    Since the Yale cognitive scientist Laurie Santos began teaching her class Psychology and the Good Life in 2018, it has become one of the school’s most popular courses. The first year the class was offered, nearly a quarter of the undergraduate student body enrolled. You could see that as a positive: all these young high-achievers looking to learn scientifically corroborated techniques for living a happier life. But you could also see something melancholy in the course’s popularity: all these young high-achievers looking for something they’ve lost, or never found. Either way, the desire to lead a more fulfilled life is hardly limited to young Ivy Leaguers, and Santos turned her course into a popular podcast series “The Happiness Lab,” which quickly rose above the crowded happiness-advice field. (It has been downloaded more than 64 million times.) “Why are there so many happiness books and other happiness stuff and people are still not happy?” asks Santos, who is 46. “Because it takes work! Because it’s hard!”

    Click here for the article.

    Click through to read the one section I found most interesting

    Class Podcast

     Wow.  The response to our class podcast has been terrific.  I am so happy everyone is enjoying the episodes.  

    Given the ever growing interest in hearing from our classmates, I have decided to continue the podcast after our 35th Reunion in June.

    If you'd like to be a guest, or nominate a classmate to be a guest, please let me know!


    To listen to the podcast, click here.



    Friday, February 18, 2022

    Mary Broach -- new podcast episode

     


    Mary Broach has been changing her community by organizing women to support organizations that make a difference.  Starting with a simple concept -- let's get 100 women to donate $1,000 each -- Mary and her colleagues have had a profound impact on the greater Philadelphia area.  Each year, they band together and make a difference.  Listen in as Mary explains what she has done and how her efforts have evolved over time.  Truly inspirational.



    Thursday, February 17, 2022

    David Kramer -- New podcast episode


     

    Listen to our latest podcast episode as David Kramer shares his thoughts about real estate, the future of New York City and making sustainable housing in the wide-ranging discussion.

    David is a native New Yorker who loves developing housing as part of his commitment to help build a better city. David joined Hudson back in the stone age of 1995 and has played a role in many of Hudson’s most exciting achievements of the past 3 decades including the world’s largest Passive House building, the House at Cornell Tech, the development of the Riverwalk neighborhood on Roosevelt Island, and the redevelopment of the Brooklyn Heights library, One Clinton. David has a Bachelor Degree from Yale University and graduated from the Coro Foundation’s Fellows Program in Public Affairs. He’s served on the boards of the Brooklyn Bridge Park Conservancy, the Brooklyn Navy Yard Development Corporation, the Coro Foundation, New York City School Support Services, the Brooklyn Real Estate Roundtable and the Collegiate School Alumni Council. David has seen most Broadway musicals and plays a lot of KenKen.  





    Thursday, February 3, 2022

    Lan Samantha Chang -- a new podcast to discuss Sam's new novel, The Family Chao


    Sam Chang
    is an accomplished writer who has just come out with a novel, The Family Chao.  The story of a family of immigrants and first generation children who struggle with life in a midwestern town.  In this episode, we discuss the book, its themes of belonging, assimilation, alienation and ethnicity.  

    Listen by clicking here.
    For more about Sam and her new book, please visit her website: https://lansamanthachang.com/